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  • Cadillac Appoints Marc Hynes as Chief Racing Officer

    Cadillac Appoints Marc Hynes as Chief Racing Officer

    Cadillac has appointed Marc Hynes as Chief Racing Officer of its new Cadillac F1 team. He will lead driver development and align the squad’s sporting and technical operations as Cadillac prepares for its 2026 debut. Hynes’s remit includes aligning the driver roster with engineering, streamlining sporting and technical procedures, and shaping team culture and performance to strengthen collaboration between technical and sporting departments.

    Hynes brings both racing and management pedigree. He was the 1999 British F3 champion and previously led driver development at the Marussia/Manor operation. He managed Project Forty Four and worked closely with Lewis Hamilton’s management from 2015–2021, briefly reuniting with Hamilton in 2024 before separating again ahead of his move to Cadillac. Team principal Graeme Lowdon, a former Marussia/Virgin colleague who now co-owns Equals Management with Hynes, described him as a major asset for the new operation.

    Operationally, Hynes will work alongside Lowdon and directly manage race drivers Valtteri Bottas and Sergio Perez, while overseeing reserve driver Zhou Guanyu and test driver Colton Herta. Herta is competing in F2 in 2026 and seeking promotion to F1. Cadillac says Hynes will focus on driving peak performance across the driver program, where he intends to create “clarity, alignment, and discipline” so drivers and engineers can perform at their best as the team establishes its driver pathway and on-track program.

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  • Logan Seavey Breaks 25-lap Volusia Record, Wins USAC Opener

    Logan Seavey Breaks 25-lap Volusia Record, Wins USAC Opener

    Logan Seavey won the USAC AMSOIL Sprint Car National Championship season opener at Volusia Speedway Park in Barberville, Fla., earlier this week. He took the feature at Winter Dirt Games XVII and set a new 25-lap track record of 8:10.705. Seavey, driving the Abacus Racing/Mountain Mechanical – Droplight – Indy Powersports/DRC/Stanton Chevy, held off a late charge from Brady Bacon and prevailed by 0.646 seconds.

    Bacon led a race-high 19 laps and mounted a decisive late move, with reports differing on precisely when Seavey took control. Two accounts said he ran green-to-checkered, while another said he took the lead from Bacon on lap 20. But all agree Seavey fended off Bacon’s move in turns one and two on the final lap and regained the lead exiting turn two to hold the last half lap.

    The victory was Seavey’s 34th career USAC triumph and his third straight USAC National Sprint Car feature win, dating to the final weekend of 2025 at Central Arizona Raceway. It moves him within one win of tying Rich Vogler and Jon Stanbrough for 14th on the USAC all-time wins list. The result left Seavey and Bacon tied atop the USAC AMSOIL Sprint Car National Championship standings with 76 points each. Justin Grant finished third, C.J. Leary fourth, and Briggs Danner fifth. Jake Swanson posted the LearnLab qualifying fast-time at 16.489 seconds, while C.J. Leary posted the fastest hot lap at 16.352 seconds. The heat winners were Kevin Thomas Jr., Kyle Cummins, and Briggs Danner. Brady Bacon collected the K&N Filters Clean Air Award, and Chase Stockon earned Rod End Supply Hard Charger honors after charging from 17th to eighth.

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  • Overton Sweeps Screven, Wins Volusia Late Model Feature

    Overton Sweeps Screven, Wins Volusia Late Model Feature

    Brandon Overton has put together his most dominant stretch of Late Model dirt racing in the early 2026 season, sweeping high-profile events across multiple tours. He swept Winter Freeze XVI at Screven Motor Speedway and followed that with a win in the opening DIRTcar Nationals Late Model feature at Volusia Speedway Park.

    The Volusia victory was his fourth straight Late Model win of the early 2026 season, matching his entire 2025 win total and marking his first national-level triumph in more than nine months.

    It was also his fifth DIRTcar Nationals victory in the past six years, underscoring his strong early-season form across multiple Late Model tours.

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  • Antonelli Unhurt in Single-Car Crash, Fit for Bahrain

    Antonelli Unhurt in Single-Car Crash, Fit for Bahrain

    Kimi Antonelli walked away unhurt after a crash near his home in Serravalle, San Marino, on Saturday, Mercedes confirmed. The 19-year-old called the police to the scene after his privately owned Mercedes AMG GT 63 PRO 4MATIC+ struck a guardrail. Local officers attended, and Mercedes said Antonelli was the only person involved. The limited-edition “Motorsport Collectors Edition” AMG GT 63, one of 200 examples with hand-painted Petronas livery and a 4.0-liter twin-turbo V8, was damaged in the incident.

    The Brackley-based Formula 1 squad described the incident as an isolated road accident and said it had no impact on the driver’s fitness ahead of the competitive build-up to the new season.

    He is scheduled to drive the W17 in multiple sessions at the Bahrain test, including the opening day’s afternoon slot, alternating with teammate George Russell. The crash comes as Antonelli prepares for his second Formula 1 season with Mercedes, after recording three podiums in his rookie campaign, and taking his first pole in the Miami sprint. The Italian went on to finish seventh in the drivers’ championship, and Mercedes entered the Bahrain test among the title favorites as teams fine-tune cars ahead of the season-opening races.

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  • Yamaha Finds V4 Fault at Sepang, Limits Power in Testing

    Yamaha Finds V4 Fault at Sepang, Limits Power in Testing

    Yamaha’s new V4 engine suffered unexpected failures at the Sepang pre-season test, forcing a safety-first shutdown of factory running and disrupting the team’s program. An unforeseen fault first appeared on one of Fabio Quartararo’s bikes after his opening-day crash and was followed by a separate engine breakage on Toprak Razgatlioglu’s machine. Yamaha described the problem as something “we never had,” halting Wednesday’s running while engineers investigated, and kept garage doors closed as a precaution.

    Engineers initially could not find the cause, but later identified the issue and allowed limited on-track activity, running the V4s with reduced power and rev limits to protect riders and equipment. The team removed long 60-70 lap runs and focused on ergonomics and sprint work. Yamaha intends to bring replacement engines ahead of the next two-day pre-season test at Buriram on February 21-22 to verify fixes and assess whether the imposed limits can be lifted, and warned that ambient temperatures above 30°C may exacerbate the faults.

    The engine problems, combined with Quartararo’s crash, intensified scrutiny around the test. Spanish reports that Quartararo has decided not to renew with Yamaha, and instead reached an agreement with Honda, remain unconfirmed. The French rider has publicly denied signing for Honda while acknowledging he is in discussions. Team director Massimo Meregalli said the Sepang interruption was an unexpected delay that pushed some evaluations and contract talks toward the next test rather than changing decisions about Quartararo’s future. Alex Rins, the only factory Yamaha rider present, said the issue appeared under control and still managed his quickest laps of the test.

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  • Newey-Led Aston Martin Reveals Honda-Powered AMR26

    Newey-Led Aston Martin Reveals Honda-Powered AMR26

    Aston Martin staged a public launch in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, to reveal the AMR26 and its new satin green livery. However, a livestream of the event suffered technical glitches. The car is the first Aston Martin design under Adrian Newey and the team’s first works partnership with Honda. The AMR26 ran in an all-black/exposed-carbon test guise during a Barcelona shakedown two weeks earlier, appearing late on Day 4 and logging 65 laps.

    Newey now serves as team principal while remaining managing technical partner. The AMR26 shows notable design changes, including revised suspension concepts and tight engine-bay packaging to accommodate Honda’s RA626H power unit. It also highlights a move away from some Mercedes customer components toward an in-house gearbox and rear-suspension solution. Honda praised the electric side of the RA626H while expressing less satisfaction with its combustion element. Reports around the return of works engines referenced regulatory disputes, such as an interpretation over compression ratios involving Mercedes.

    Organisational shifts accompany the technical overhaul. Andy Cowell has moved to Chief Strategy Officer to coordinate the Honda integration, and Aston Martin has completed factory upgrades and a new wind tunnel. Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll were retained for a fourth successive season, with Alonso framing 2026 as a critical campaign, and owner Lawrence Stroll publicly defending the investment in the team.

    With limited early mileage from Barcelona, Aston Martin will run two Bahrain pre-season test windows, February 11–13 and February 18–20, to validate the car’s concepts and assess reliability before the championship begins. The AMR26, its Honda power unit, and the reworked organisation were presented as the centerpiece of a technical, livery, and competitive reset ahead of the 2026 season.

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  • Hadjar Steps into Red Bull Amid 2026 Technical Reset

    Hadjar Steps into Red Bull Amid 2026 Technical Reset

    Isack Hadjar has been confirmed as a Red Bull Racing driver for the 2026 Formula 1 season and will partner four-time world champion Max Verstappen. His arrival coincides with a major technical reset that will bring shorter, lighter cars, overbody aerodynamics, movable wings, and new power units with a 50/50 electrical-combustion split. Red Bull’s 2026 package is centered on the RB22 and the team’s first in-house powertrain developed in partnership with Ford, making the engineering transition as important as the driver change.

    Hadjar earned promotion after a strong 2025 debut with satellite team Racing Bulls, scoring 51 points, taking a podium at the Dutch Grand Prix, and posting the best qualifying record of any driver outside the sport’s top four teams. His results led to him displacing Yuki Tsunoda. Commentators have highlighted his rapid progression. Alex Brundle called him the central rookie to watch in the uncertain new era and said the regulation reset gives Hadjar a favorable chance to establish himself if he adapts quickly. Felipe Massa endorsed the move as “an amazing opportunity,” adding that Hadjar should have an easier time adapting at Red Bull than Liam Lawson did. Hadjar himself reportedly expected the seat and has stated his aim to be a world champion who must beat everyone, including Verstappen.

    Both Brundle and the reporting emphasize that Hadjar’s prospects will depend as much on Red Bull’s new package as on his own adaptability. Brundle suggested that if the RB22 proves less competitive than hoped, Red Bull might have additional reasons to lean on Hadjar during the transition. He also cautioned that early indicators, such as reports of a strong Mercedes power unit and Lewis Hamilton posting the fastest shakedown time in a Ferrari, remain provisional until the new cars run in a race environment. The signing, therefore, represents not only a major personnel change but also a strategic test of driver hierarchy and development under fundamentally altered technical rules. Hadjar’s early career is set to be shaped by how quickly he and the team navigate 2026’s reset.

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  • McLaren Starts 2026 as Favorite, Faces Technical Reset

    McLaren Starts 2026 as Favorite, Faces Technical Reset

    On paper, McLaren starts 2026 as the team to beat. The squad enters the season as back-to-back constructors’ champions (2024, 2025) and with Lando Norris crowned 2025 drivers’ champion after a final-round showdown in Abu Dhabi. However, sweeping 2026 rule changes amount to a fundamental reset of chassis, aerodynamics, and power-unit fundamentals, so last season’s advantages may not carry over.

    McLaren’s dominant mid-2024 MCL38 and its follow-up MCL39, which relied on very low ride heights and a particular floor concept, are likely to have limited read-across to the new regulations. Chief designer Rob Marshall has said key performance edges are “effectively gone.” Aerodynamics technical director Peter Prodromou led a major redesign McLaren described as largely new: slightly narrower and producing less downforce, and built to suit higher-rake setups and altered floor and wing rules.

    Compounding the aerodynamic reset, McLaren remains a Mercedes customer under a supply partnership that runs through 2030. That customer status can create structural disadvantages versus manufacturer teams that design chassis and power unit together from the start of a regulations cycle. Mercedes impressed with reliability at the Barcelona shakedown, which reduces engine-side risk for McLaren, and reports suggest Mercedes will lead power-unit development in 2026 and benefit from aggregated data across its customer teams, a potential development-gap risk for McLaren.

    Off track, McLaren has retained its championship-winning driver pairing of Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri (third in Drivers’ Standings in 2025). Team principal Andrea Stella has signaled continuity of driver equality and said the team will “streamline” rules of engagement after Piastri’s remark that current practices “probably caused some headaches.” McLaren also hired Will Courtenay from Red Bull as sporting director. Those operational tweaks, combined with the new aerodynamic package and continued Mercedes supply, form the core of McLaren’s defense plan.

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  • McLaren Unveils MCL40; Norris to Carry No.1 in Title Defense

    McLaren Unveils MCL40; Norris to Carry No.1 in Title Defense

    McLaren revealed the MCL40 and its 2026 papaya-and-black livery at the Bahrain International Circuit, becoming the penultimate team to show its new look ahead of pre‑season testing. The garage-presented design stays broadly in line with recent years but leans more heavily on papaya with a revised black pattern on the engine cover; McLaren described it as its final papaya-and-black scheme. McLaren also promoted Mastercard to title sponsor, increasing its branding on the car, the team’s first title sponsor since Vodafone more than a decade ago.

    McLaren ran an unofficial shakedown in Barcelona in late January in a black camouflage wrap, completing 287 laps, fewer than Mercedes’ 500, with only Audi, Cadillac, and Aston Martin recording fewer among the 10 teams present. The MCL40’s fastest time in Barcelona sat within 0.25 seconds of Lewis Hamilton’s benchmark lap, which team principal Andrea Stella said underlines that Mercedes “has raised the bar.” The car will remain in Bahrain for the two scheduled test blocks on February 11–13 and February 18–20 as McLaren continues on‑track preparations ahead of the season opener in Melbourne on March 8.

    The launch framed McLaren’s bid to defend both the drivers’ and constructors’ titles after securing a record‑equalling constructors’ crown and Lando Norris’ maiden drivers’ title in Abu Dhabi in 2025. Norris will carry the No. 1 on the MCL40, with Oscar Piastri alongside him. Racing CEO Zak Brown said early indicators point to competitiveness while urging caution about firm conclusions this early. Some bookmakers have already flagged Mercedes and George Russell as early favorites. With F1’s 2026 regulation reset expected to reshape the grid, the MCL40 launch served as both a visual reveal and a technical preview of how McLaren intends to defend its double titles. As of the Bahrain event, Aston Martin remained the only team yet to show its 2026 livery, with the Adrian Newey–designed AMR26 scheduled for an unveiling Monday evening.

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